So, have any of you lovely men read The Hunger Games trilogy? I held off for a long while because I was afraid, being in the YA section, it would be another Twilight and wanted nothing to do with it.

However, after having read enough about the plot I decided to give the first book a try. Read the entire thing in a single day. Did the same with the final two in the trilogy.

If any of you guys read and enjoyed the Harry Potter series, I suggest you give this one a go. It's not like HP at ALL though. Aside from the fact that it's in the YA section yet is very, very good, and I think a bit too violent and sadistic for young teenagers.

They're shooting the first film right now, to be released in March 2012. It stars Jennifer Lawrence as the main character, Katniss, Woody Harrelson, Stanley Tucci, Elizabeth Banks, Donald Sutherland, Lenny Kravitz, Wes Bentley, Josh Hutcherson & Liam Hemsworth, among many other smaller characters. Co-written by Gary Ross (Big, Dave, Pleasantville, Seabiscuit, Tale of Despereaux) and the author Suzanne Collins herself. Directed by Ross (Pleasantville, Seabiscuit.)

Last edited by cozmeesah on Mon Nov 14, 2011 10:35 am, edited 2 times in total.

It's set in a post-apocalyptic society in what used to be North America, now one large country called Panem. Consists of a Capitol in the middle (around where Denver is now) with 12 large districts surrounding it (they spread across entire continent.) Each district has a different trade that corresponds with it's location (i.e. District 12 is in the Appalachians hence coal mining is their industry, 11 is in midwest hence agriculture, etc.)

The government in the Capitol is oppressive, violent and cruel to the districts. Everything the districts produce is basically for the consumption of all the rich, gluttonous people in the Capitol. People in the Districts are starving, confined, and in many cases guarded by huge walls with armed guards. Several decades before these books are set, the 13 original districts started up a rebellion against the Capitol. But the Capitol staunched the rebels in Districts 1-12, and completely obliterated District 13, wiping it off the map.

To discourage future violence from rebellions and to demonstrate to the districts that not even children are beyond the reach of the Capitol's power, they created The Hunger Games. An annual televised event that they force all citizens of Panem to watch and celebrate. Sort of a real-life Survivor. Each year one female and one male aged 12-18 (no matter what their physical or mental state) from each district are chosen by lottery to compete in the Games. The 24 contestants (or "tributes") are taken to a large "arena" that the Capitol Gamemakers built. Can include mountains, oceans, huge forests, deserts, etc. Arenas are filled with weapons and numerous lethal traps that they've set for the players. They fight to the death all while trying to avoid these traps. The winner is the one that's not dead at the end.

The books focus on Katniss Everdeen, the 16-year-old female tribute from District 12, and everything she goes through.

peeker643 wrote:Thanks Coz. Never heard of this til you mentioned this so I turned on the Kindle yesterday and saw the first book for $5.

I'll read anything for $5

Thought it was good, finished it and enjoyed it, A bit heavy on the angst with the whole Gayle/Peeta thing but I'll get the 2nd one as well.

The whole concept was cool IMO. Now I'm determined to figure out what's edible in my backyard too.

Are the 2nd and 3rd books a departure of any sort from Book1?

Glad to hear you liked it, Peek. :)

Yeah, you have to kind of expect a bit of angsty/feelings type stuff in a YA book written by a woman. That same thing with Peeta/Gale goes throughout all three books. But doesn't really get any worse than in the first.

Semi-spoilers, so I'm putting them in white text:Catching Fire (Book 2) is my favorite of the 3. It deals more with the aftermath of the Games and the Capitol's anger at Katniss. How they handle her and the sparks of rebellion that her actions in the Games caused. You really start to see even more how evil the Capitol is and how sadistic President Snow is.

Mockingjay (Book 3) is the rebellion book. The war. Katniss is sort of Joan of Arc in this one.

Just finished the last book today, on your recommendation. I really enjoyed them. The angst was really heavy in spots, and I thought the main character was kind of dense when it came to it, but overall I thought the concept was fascinating. The themes in the books, most notably about the nature of human beings, are not subtle.

I thought the first half of book 2 was a bit slow, but the second half more than made up for it. That was probably my favorite stretch of the series. I ended up finishing that one late the other night, and started the third as soon as I had free time yesterday.

And whenever I read dialogue by President Snow, I heard it in Malcolm McDowell's voice.

What's the rating on this puppy? Hoping for some quality violence/gore come kill-or-be-killed time.

Will be PG-13. They can't go R or it will risk cutting out a lot of the fans.

The thing about this particular trailer is that it only shows footage from the first 1/3 to 1/2 of the film. Lionsgate purposely left the footage of the actual Games until future trailers. So as to not spoil everything at once.

Looking forward to this but really wish it would have lived up the book and made it R-rated. (Jennifer Lawrence not exactly being tough to look at...)

Playing here is the closest thing to heaven. Really, I mean it's amazing to be in a place where the fans truly cherish their football team and stick behind them win or lose. We players love them, too. I feel a sense of accomplishment playing here, we are a special breed of football players with a great opportunity." ~ tOSU LB Brian Rolle

Oustanding. As addicted to a book as I've been in a long time, in terms of wanting to keep reading it.

Like everyone else said, the Kat/Peeta angle was a little too heavy. But an amazing concept. Finished it last night and immediately bought the second one. Can't wait for the flick, although PG-13 is disappointing, if understandable.

"It's like dating a woman who hates you so much she will never break up with you, even if you burn down the house every single autumn." ~ Chuck Klosterman on Browns fans relationship with the Browns

e0y2e3 wrote:Can you guys post pics of you standing in line opening night with all the Tweens an Twighlight girls? It'll be amusing to say the least.

I've never read or seen any of the Twilight stuff, but I gotta say ... I am a little confused by all the parallels people make between the two, which I was actually totally unaware of until the last couple days, seeing some stuff online and rereading this thread.

Is the Hunger Games really considered like a teen girl thing?

Book was pretty brutal. Plot line is even more brutal. Movie looks sweet. Why the comps to Twilight and Harry Potter?

"It's like dating a woman who hates you so much she will never break up with you, even if you burn down the house every single autumn." ~ Chuck Klosterman on Browns fans relationship with the Browns

Yeah, the concept is amazingly cool. 24 people in a fight to the death massive outdoor battleground.

The Kat/Peeta thing was a little overblown, but not to Ben Affleck/Kate Beckingsale levels from the Pearl Harbor movie, where it ruins it. I actually thought it was an interesting addition to the plot and the ending.

"It's like dating a woman who hates you so much she will never break up with you, even if you burn down the house every single autumn." ~ Chuck Klosterman on Browns fans relationship with the Browns

I'm reading a series of books right now (The Pellinor) that I found in the Teen section of the library... today's chapter consisted of one kid infiltrating an army of brainwashed child slaves to try and find his captured friend/girlfriend. While trying to find out where she is held, he tries to avoid the punishments which they dole out, including being chained in the yard to be torn apart by the other children (without weapons), which is preferrable to the other punishment of being staked in the yard and allowed to live as you slide slowly down the pole.

All his efforts were for naught, though, since they already killed his girlfriend and dumped her corpse in a ditch.

After everyone realized the huge financial benefits of being part of the growing "Teen" or "Young Adult" literary market, tons of authors (some of them even good) jumped in. And all they had to do was remove the sex scenes (which usually come across as lame in literature anyway), remove the language (easy), and change their adult characters to 16-18 year olds (while changing nothing about the way they act).

Presto! Instant movie deal.

How much money did Rowling make off the Harry Potter series? She can probably buy one of the Carolinas if she wants.

Has anyone seen Battle Royale? It's a Japanese flick about a bunch of kids that have to kill each other. Pretty good flick.

I just started to read this because the trailer looked cool and because I like to read books bofre seeing a movie. The books are always better. Sounds like Hunger Games is pretty close to what happened in Battle Royale.

From the brief snippets I have gathered the production team has worked to keep it as authentic as possible to the story. Obviously will eliminate the nudity but should be able to get away with some of the violence as some of it actually happens "off camera" if they stay remotely close the the 1st person account.

The beginning of the 2nd book was probably the most "tween" oriented because of the plodding to get the plot started. Those that know that book, know how quickly that turned around by the end of Catching Fire.

Definitely think it'll be prey for the Twilight-like crowd even though I can't imagine it even remotely turns out like those movies. I haven't read or seen a minute of it so I couldn't judge but I'll likely avoid any possibility of seeing it with suck a crowd. Just catch it when it makes pay per view or something.

As an aside, the 3rd book was disappointing to me. Was slapped together and rushed by Collins. Shame too because it had a lot of opportunity with the subject matter. Hated some of the decisions she took on it too.

Playing here is the closest thing to heaven. Really, I mean it's amazing to be in a place where the fans truly cherish their football team and stick behind them win or lose. We players love them, too. I feel a sense of accomplishment playing here, we are a special breed of football players with a great opportunity." ~ tOSU LB Brian Rolle

noles1 wrote:As an aside, the 3rd book was disappointing to me. Was slapped together and rushed by Collins. Shame too because it had a lot of opportunity with the subject matter. Hated some of the decisions she took on it too.

I got that impression with the last 1/3 of it too. Especially one certain part that seemed completely forced and unnecessary.

noles1 wrote:As an aside, the 3rd book was disappointing to me. Was slapped together and rushed by Collins. Shame too because it had a lot of opportunity with the subject matter. Hated some of the decisions she took on it too.

I got that impression with the last 1/3 of it too. Especially one certain part that seemed completely forced and unnecessary.

Yep, hated couple of the parts (sure we are thinking the same). One of those situations where I'd be comfortable with the movie taking a few of their own liberties. Actually doubt many that read the book would mind all that much.

Playing here is the closest thing to heaven. Really, I mean it's amazing to be in a place where the fans truly cherish their football team and stick behind them win or lose. We players love them, too. I feel a sense of accomplishment playing here, we are a special breed of football players with a great opportunity." ~ tOSU LB Brian Rolle

motherscratcher wrote:Has anyone seen Battle Royale? It's a Japanese flick about a bunch of kids that have to kill each other. Pretty good flick.

I just started to read this because the trailer looked cool and because I like to read books bofre seeing a movie. The books are always better. Sounds like Hunger Games is pretty close to what happened in Battle Royale.

Hikohadon wrote:I'm reading a series of books right now (The Pellinor) that I found in the Teen section of the library... today's chapter consisted of one kid infiltrating an army of brainwashed child slaves to try and find his captured friend/girlfriend. While trying to find out where she is held, he tries to avoid the punishments which they dole out, including being chained in the yard to be torn apart by the other children (without weapons), which is preferrable to the other punishment of being staked in the yard and allowed to live as you slide slowly down the pole.

All his efforts were for naught, though, since they already killed his girlfriend and dumped her corpse in a ditch.

"Teen" literature doesn't mean what it used to.

It may not be "teen", but it does concern kids.

You wanna get your sock knocked off by sci-fi dealing with children, in this case the hero is 6 or 7 when the book starts, check out Orson Scott Card's "Ender's Game", about genius kids sent to a space station playing "battle games" which is actually teaching them to be generals in a space war.

To the topic...I've gotta say I'm pretty geeked about Hunger Games as well. First and foremost because I think Jennifer Lawrence is and incredible actress. (see also; Winter's Bone)

This is an article on why someone thinks it will make a good movie, but really it acts as a good primer to fill yourself in on the backstory (or remind yourself). It touches on the setting, the plot, and the main characters without getting too spoilery.

I guess this was briefly mentioned already, but if you're looking for a more brutal and less teeny bopper version of essentially the exact same story line, the Japanese movie Battle Royale is fuckin' fantastic. Came out about a decade ago and was based on a book, as well. The Hunger Games writer has claimed she had never heard of the book or movie, which is certainly possible, cuz the story is hardly wildly original anyway. But anyway, by no coincidence, Battle Royale just got a new DVD re-release this week, so check it out.

Went to a 2 p.m. showing yesterday, hoping there wouldn't be many truants skipping school to see Katness & friends. (There were still 30 or 40 in that showing.)

Movie sorta blah. Jennifer Lawrence did as much as she could with the material. Direction pretty much sucked: widescreen shakycam for the first 20 minutes that drove me nuts. Way too many extreme close-ups—for no good reason.

Leaving the theater at 4:45 (Middleburg Heights Regal), there were a couple-three hundred teeny-boppers lined up outside, in the lobby and at the candy counter.

Overhyped—but it'll pay off for the studios. Could be a $150 million weekend.

Finished book one and 2/3 of the way through book 2. Which says a lot. I only made it half way through the Dragon tattoo series. Either the books are good, or I'm so burned out that anything non-school will hold my attention.

Erie Warrior wrote:Finished book one and 2/3 of the way through book 2. Which says a lot. I only made it half way through the Dragon tattoo series. Either the books are good, or I'm so burned out that anything non-school will hold my attention.

I do like them.

Yeah, my daughter had them and I kind of casually started glancing through and next thing I knew was up half the night reading it.

The books are a lot more harsh than I expected. If they put all the gore in, they would easily get an "R", especially the 3rd book.

The movie was OK. It seemed to skip a lot of the angst, which was a plus in my book (and would have been tough to show considering it happens inside Katnis' head). IMO the series was made to be an "R" rated series. It won't happen, obviously, but I believe that would make it so much better.

As for the books...brutal. In a good way. The things that happen to those kids, and their resulting mental state struck me as very believable. That said, I wasn't nearly as high on the 3rd book as I was the 1st two.